Mexican artist Nahum B. Zenil has said:
"I have always felt the need for self-analysis in my work in order to accept
myself and the way I live. I have always felt marginalized in my life and
have experienced a great sense of solitude. In my art I've tried to effect
a communication between the members of society and myself." This statement
contains the essential kernel of meaning in his highly complex and invariably
self-referential art. Since the mid-1970s Zenil, who works principally in
mixed media on paper as well as oil on canvas, has had a single subject:
the artist himself. His face and body appear, in one form or another, in
virtually all his works of the past twenty years. Zenil employs his own image
to make insightful, often acerbic, commentaries on Mexican society of the
late twentieth century.
Zenil opens himself up to the viewer, focusing the spectator's gaze directly
on his bodysometimes clothed but often not. He sets himself up as the
object of scrutiny, the receptor of voyeuristic fixation. Yet he also turns
the tables on us, gazing back at all who attempt to penetrate his world,
challenging and goading, while at the same time inviting us to participate
in the personal dramas (or, sometimes, melodramas) that he fashions from
his own autobiographical obsessions.
While Zenils own body is obviously the focal point of his visual dialogue
with the viewer, he treats a wide range of themes in his art. He queries
and problematizes issues of nationalism in many drawings and paintings that
incorporate the icons of his country, notably the Mexican flag. His definitions
of "family" often differ radically from traditional Mexican notions of the
immediate or extended family.
Religious imagery is another favorite subject. The Virgin of Guadalupe occupies
pride of place in Zenils symbolic vocabulary. She is frequently shown
together with the artist himself and with his companion, Gerardo Vilchis.
The Virgin often appears above them, blessing their union or casting a protective
aura around them. The wide range of saints populating Zenil's works attests
to his fervent interest in the potent forces of the spiritual world. At the
heart of Zenil's imagery, however, is the continuing dilemma of how to define,
through visual analogues, his position as a gay man in contemporary Mexican
society. Zenil has long ardently supported gay rights in Mexico. Since the
early 1980s, he has been active in the Círculo Cultural Gay, which
presents exhibitions and other events each June in the Museo del Chopo in
Mexico City.
Zenil was born in 1947 in the state of Veracruz. His upbringing was essentially
rural. Describing his childhood, he states: "I came from a lower-middle-class
background and I had little or no access to culture as a child, yet I felt
a great need to create. I never had a really integrated family life and I
envied my cousins and others who did. I lived most of my childhood with my
mother and grandmother in the house that appears in many of my paintings."
In 1959 Zenil enrolled at the Escuela Nacional de Maestros (National
Teachers School) in Mexico City, from which he graduated in 1964. His
initial interest in self-portrayal evidently emerged there: "I remember that
when I was in teachers school we studied art. One of the professors
asked us to do a self-portrait and this might have been the start of what
would virtually become an obsession for me."
Zenil has lived in the Mexican capital since his earliest years of advanced
study. He worked in a variety of schools, teaching all subjects, from drawing
to sports, for twenty years before he became a full-time artist. His experience
as a schoolteacher made a deep impression on his imagination. In many
compositions he employs his students as subjects, often enumerating them
and discussing their personal histories.
Zenil entered the Escuela Nacional de Pintura y Escultura (known as La Esmeralda)
in Mexico City in 1968; his principal teachers were Cristobal Torres and
Benito Messeguer. During his time there Zenil painted a number of abstract
works, not dissimilar to those of the painters of the Mexican "Ruptura" movement
of the 1960s and 1970s. He soon found abstraction insufficient to communicate
the emotional content that he wanted to express in his art.
Because Zenil desires that his viewers know the precise circumstances behind
the creation of a work, he often inscribes the scenario in his own handwriting.
Image and text are virtually intertwined in his art. He believes that many
of his works originate in the same impulse that leads us to write letters
or postcards. "For me, paper and pen are the most natural means of
communication," Zenil has said. "I first started to use them because they
were the cheapest media when I was a student. Later, they became my favorite
means of working and communicating. I like paper very much. I like to cut
it, to scratch and to touch it. At some point I'd like to make my own paper.
I decided to write texts on my pictures as if I were writing a letter to
a friend."
The artist's handiwork is always distinctly visible, evidence of his interest
in the act of assembling. He often merges, in collage-like fashion, one element
of a work into another. Sometimes he places one piece of paper over another,
often sewing them together with thread or yarn. In many of his more ambitious
compositions, Zenil attaches pieces of cloth to the surface of the paper.
Occasionally he threads string or rope through the paper or the border. In
his boxes and other constructions, he juxtaposes a wide variety of
objectscloth dolls, stuffed cloth hearts, baubles of various sorts,
etc. These are often handmade, and we immediately grasp the labor that went
into their creation. For Zenil the art-making process recalls the sewing
that his mother did for hours on end or evokes the dignity of handicrafts
and the traditional importance in Mexican folk art of the idiosyncratic,
highly personal use of the hand as fashioner of the object.
Melancholy and nostalgia pervade much of Zenil's oeuvre, creating an atmosphere
of solitary, soulful revery. With its distressed surfaces and sepia tones,
his work also recalls the look of late-nineteenth- and early-twentieth-century
Mexican prints, including broadsheets by artists such as Manuel Manilla and
José Guadalupe Posada, which were cheaply produced and widely distributed.
In his use of skulls, skeletons, and devil figures, Zenil revives favorite
motifs of Posada, who is often cited as the progenitor of modern Mexican
graphic art.
Critics have often noted similarities (both specific and spiritual) between
the art of Zenil and that of Frida Kahlo. Indeed, self-portraiture lies at
the root of both artists production. For both Kahlo and Zenil, the
depiction of the self represents a cathartic experience, a purging gesture,
in which pain, both psychic and physical, is exorcised.
Zenil's work reached its maturity in the 1980s. During that decade many younger
artists, such as Julio Galán, Rocío Maldonado, and Dulce
María Núñez, were returning to traditional Mexican themes,
often examined in a skeptical or satirical fashion. The large group of painters
and printmakers known as the "Neo-Mexicanists" reasserted a national sensibility.
Zenils unique appropriation of traditional Mexican signs and symbols
places him in the current of this movement.
In an international perspective, Nahum B. Zenil's art finds few counterparts.
It is hardly "erotic" in the conventional mode of, say, Paul Cadmus or Robert
Mapplethorpe. Zenil's manner of drawing, with its self-conscious awkwardness
expressing both hesitation and boldness, is reminiscent of David Hockneys
drawings and paintings of the 1960s inspired by the poetry of Constantin
Cavafy and Walt Whitman.
The work of Nahum B. Zenil stands, for the most part, alone. Neither his
imagination nor his frames of reference need move beyond the small, crowded
rooms of his house in Mexico City or the studio of his country refuge in
Tenango del Aire, a village about an hour's drive from the Mexican capital
and situated in the shadow of the volcanoes Iztaccíhuatl and
Popocatépetl (sacred mountains for ancient peoples of Mexico, whose
forms sometimes appear in the artist's work). Zenil's art reflects his own
place in the cosmos. This is not to say, of course, that his work lacks
implications for the world outside his private universe. In Zenil's paintings
and mixed-media works we perceive an intensely compassionate humanism that
seeks to confront a myriad of moral and ethical issues, centering on the
redeeming powers of tolerance, respect, and love, with clear relevance for
all who are willing to take his messages to heart.
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